About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 27. Chapters: Maclean's, Opera Canada, Brave Words & Bloody Knuckles, Corporate Knights, The Walrus, RPM, Rites, Chart, Taddle Creek, Existere, Spacing, Exclaim!, The Magazine, Hart House Review, Literary Review of Canada, Canadian Immigrant, Saturday Night, Fab, Ukula, REM, Shameless, Rue Morgue, TheGATE.ca, The Record, Siren, Quill & Quire, This, Chatelaine, Women's Post, Canadian Living, Canadian Business, Gay, The Body Politic, Flare, Descant, Toronto Life, Pound, The Toronto Globalist, Ryerson Review of Journalism, Urbane Magazine, Fashion, Brick, A Literary Journal, AbOUT, Shift, Neksis Magazine, Profit, Gasoline magazine, Graffiti, MoneySense, Marketing. Excerpt: Maclean's is a Canadian weekly news magazine, reporting on Canadian issues such as politics, pop culture, and current events. Founded in 1905 by Toronto journalist/entrepreneur Lt.-Col. John Bayne Maclean, a 43-year-old trade magazine publisher who purchased an advertising agency's in-house business journal, along with its 5,000-strong subscription base. The Business Magazine, was launched in October of that year as a pocket-sized digest of articles gathered from Canadian, British, and American periodicals. It sold 6,000 copies. Inside its bright blue cover, the fledgling monthly anointed itself, "the Cream of the World's magazines reproduced for Busy People." Its aim, Maclean wrote a year later, was not "merely to entertain but also to inspire its readers." It was renamed The Busy Man's Magazine in December 1905, and began soliciting original manuscripts on varied topics such as immigration, national defence, home life, women's suffrage, as well as fiction. Maclean renamed the magazine after himself in 1911, dropping the previous title as too evocative of a business magazine for what had become a general interest publication. Maclean hired Thomas B. Costain as ed...